et — Bellefonte, Pa., October 24, 1924. Old Age Comes When People Quit Growing Most people want to grow. They would like to advance in their work, earn more, have greater influence, do bigger things. Yet, strange to say, the world is full of people who do not “grow up.” They have lost the secret of thelr youthful days. They come to a halt in self-development, and folks say they are getting “old.” But & person ig never old until he quits growing; and he need not quit grow- ing’ until the end of his years. The most conspicuous fact about great men—men who do big things, and keep doing them—is that they never cease growing. They are perpetually young. They have the real thing, of which Ponce de Leon’s Fountain of Youth” was only an imitation. If a man sets his heart upon growing, he has but three things to do: First, he must be a learner all his life. Then, he must be a thinker—and must. think hard. Finally, he must be a doer. Some people are long on thinking, but short on doing. They are dreamers. Success and rewards always come to the person who continues to grow, but the greatest reward consists in having found the secret that makes life con- tinuously interesting.—Forbes Maga- zine. Heavy Drinking Marked Festivities of Greeks The festival of Dionysus had an im- portant influence on the life of an- cient Greece, as well as on its litera- ture and art. There were four of these every year, the Detroit News notes. One was celebrated when the new wine was tasted for the first time and plentiful drinking was char- acteristic of this festival, A great banquet accompanied the festivities. A feature of another festival, also in honor of the wine god, was a drink- ing contest. At a signal given by a trumpet, all who took part in it set their pitchers to their mouths and the judges allotted the victory to him who first emptied his. The prize consist- ed of a skin of wine, cakes or some- thing of that sort, Besides the public banquet there were also private hos- pitalities provided for those who pre- ferred to celebrate the day by them- selves in the circle of a few intimate friends and at these also much drink- ing went on, rr Good Word for Wasps The insects eaten by wasps include bud and blossom destroyers, leaf roll- ers and miners, stem-borers and leaf- - cutters—minute vegetarian pests that we are doing our best to exterminate by sprays and insecticides. Another point to be noted Is that while the wasp catches and eats the egg-laying insect itself, our sprays and insecticides can aim only, or chiefly, at killing the grub; and when that grub is safely buried inside a stem or a fruit bud then we are absolutely help- less. So, in spite of its sting and its liking for fruit when on holiday in au- tumn the wasp is far more of a friend than a foe.—KExchange. United States Language So far as we are able to learn, no early congress ever voted on the lan- guage to be used in this country. How- ever, Brander Matthews says that not long after we had proclaimed our inde- pendence an ultra-patriotic member of the Continental congress moved that we renounce the English tongue and devise a new language of our own which we would not have to share with the enemy. Roger Sherman, a member of the congress from Connec- ticut and a signer of the Declaration of Independence, moved as &n amend- ment that we retain English and com- pel the British to use another. This method, thought Sherman, would be much simpler. The new language no- tion was never heard of any more in congress. Irrepressible Youth The charming young actress, Miss Phyllis Lytton, is an ardent church worker, which lends point to the fol- lowing story. A young lady was once busy deco rating the church she attends for a harvest thanksgiving service. Presently there entered the vicar “I really must congratulate you, my dear Miss Jones,” he said. “You have all the fruits, flowers and vegetables well represented in your decorations. 1 think there is hardly an omission, is there?” The helper's face beamed. But a pert choir boy, unable to resist the temptation, spoiled it all by remark- ing, loudly enough for all to hear: “Yes, we have no bananas.” Father of Drama Aeschyins, the Greek who was “the father of the drama,” was a soldier during the Persian invasion, and took part in the battle of Marathon, and later in the historic conflict with the Persians at Salamis. These tremen- dous events inspired him to seek lit- erary expression in what were the first genuine dramas ever written by man More than three score plays came from his brain and hand, but of these only a half-dozen have been preserved. Of these the greatest are “Prometheus” which is considered by some to be the egual of the productions of Shake gpeare’s genius; the “Persians,” a pe tic and military drama, and “Age nnon,” which still ranks among the rid's dramatic masterpieces. MADE ODD BEQUESTS AND GAVE REASONS Canadian Exposed Peculiar Traits of Relatives. Rt. Hon. Austen Chamberlain re- ceived recently from an Ontario cor- respondent a copy of the will of Dr. William Dunlop, who was an assist- ant army surgeon in the War of 1812, in the Eighty-ninth British regiment. It is said the will is registered at Goderich, and is dated at Montreal, 1847. As a legal document It seems to stand in a class by itself. The maipr vortions follow : 1, William Dunlop, of Bairbraid, in the Township of Colhorne, County and district of Huron, Western Canada, Esquire, being in sound health and body, and my mind just as usual “(which my friends who flatter me say fs no great shakes at the best of times), do make this my last Will and Testament = as follows, revoking, of course, all former Wills, I leave the property of Gairpraid and all other landed property I may die possessed of to my sisters Helen Boyle Story and Elizabeth Boyle Dunlop, the former because she is married to a Minister whom she henpecks—the lat- ter because she is married to nobody nor is she like to be, for she is an old maid and not marketrife, and also I leave to them, and their heirs, my share of the stock and implements on the farm, provided always that the en- closure round my brother's grave be reserved, and if either should die with- out issue, then the other to inherit the whole. 1 leave to my sister-in-law, Louisa Dunlop, all my share of the household furniture and such traps with the ex- ceptions hereinafter mentioned. 1 leave my silver tankard to the eld- est son of Old John as the representa- tive of the family, but he would melt it down to make temperance medals and that would be sacrilege—however, I leave my big horn snuff box to him —he can only make temperance horn spoons of that. I leave my sister Jenny my Bible, «he property formerly of my great- great-grandmother, Bethia Hamilton of Wood Hall, and when she knows as much of the spirit of it as she does of fhe ieiter, she will be another guise Christian than she is. 1 also leave my late brother's watch to my brother Sandy, exhorting him at the same time to give up Whiggery, radicalism and all other sins that do most easily beset him, 1 leave my brother Alan my big snufi pox, as I am fnformed he is rather a decent Christian with a jolly face. I leave Parson Chevasse (Maggzy's nushand) the snuff box I got from the Qurnia Militia, as a small token of my gratitude for the services he has done the family in taking a sister that no man of taste would have taken. I leave John Caddie a silver teapot to the end that he may drink tea there- from to comfort him under the afflic- tion of a slatternly wife. I leave my books to my brother Andrew. because he has been so long a Jungley Wallah that he may learn to : read with them. I give my silver cup with a sovereign. , in it, to my sister, Janet Graham Dun- lop because she is an old maid, and pious, and also my granna 's snuff mull, as it looks decent to see an old woman taking snuff, Urgent Need £dwin had been strangely fidgety all the evening. Usually he was content to sit for hours and hours in the twi- light, holding his loved one, Edwar- dina, by the hand and dreaming dreams of the sweet by-and-by. Sev- eral times he glanced at his watch and at last—at least two hours before his accustomed time, he rose to take his departure. “So soon, Edwin, dear? she sighea. “Must you really go?” “I must, darling,” he answered. “Though I would sacrifice ten years of my life to stay one more short hour with you.” “But why, dear,” she begged—"why have you get to go so early tonight?” “Because, dearest,” he replied, “it’s our lodge meeting, and it I don’t go I shall be fined a dollar.” Life! The deputy warden of the peniten- tiary was looking over the new arri- vals. Among them was a tall, forlorn- looking gentleman of color who seemed to take it very hard, sighing so deeply that the deputy asked: “What's the matter, boy?” “Mah sentence, suh!” was the mournful reply. “Ah cain’t do all this heah time the jedge done gib me!” “How much are you doing?” quired the deputy. “Life!” exclaimed the new arrival, “Well,” remarked the deputy, not ankindly, “just do what you can of it.” —Everybody’s Magazine. in- Future Irrigation Less than. 2. per cent of the total arid and’ semi-arid land in the United States is now irrigated, yet reclama- :jun has already reached the stage where future progress can be made only through the construction of ex- tensive storage works or through un- derground water made available by pumping, Eo ——————— Telephones in Lithuania Telephones, which were unknown in Lithuanig “for “general private use until installed in 1915 by the Germans at the time of occupation of that country, have become so popular that the German sepparitus recently was replaced by the latest equipment made in Esthonia. ‘Wrong Mental Attitade; The Boss had just taken his head off when the telephone on his desk rang. Now he could let off steam! The Old Man thought he could eall a fellow down just for being late in the morning, did he! And the whole office laughing behind its hand! Well, it was as much as his job was worth to answer back the Old Man—but anyone who was fool enough to telephone at that particular moment would get what Was coming to him! Then he hear his wife's yolce, "Tm very busy: make it snappy,” was his first response. en the way home for the meat? pm ee— FRIENDSHIP KEY TO Comradeship Declared Best Help in Storms of Life. It you ask half a dozen friends ‘which quality is most likely to make for happiness in marriage you will ‘probably receive half a dozen different replies. and all will be {lluminating. The man much occupied with busi- ness may regard common sense as §u- 'premely important. An imaginative woman will tell you that sympathy is Then: “Stop ‘the first essential, while a less sensi- Con- itive-minded woman suggests good found it, I wish you'd run the house temper. The grace of cheerfulness, without making me errand boy! Can't the benediction of that ‘ordinary’ ou do it by yourself? What! What! ele, ..... she’s mad, I suppose.” And after at remorse set in. She’s rung off. Now extraordinary, kindness which, because so rare, is so the sunshine of a ‘merry nature, the tender appeal of un- As selfishness—all these qualities make he turned the corner to his own door , for happiness in marriage. a florist’s sign caught his eye: “Say it with flowers.” Why not, he thought to himself. But what is the final test? Which of all the varied characteristics of human For a dollar—no, fifty nature is, if developed and cherished, cents—he could smooth things over most likely to bring enduring happ} and life would be comfortable again. How he did hate upsets! had been nothing but upsets. Then the florist began it all again. No, he could not give the gentleman a dozen red roses for half a dollar— in fact, the roses were 75 cents aplece. No, violets cost even more. had some pink carnations that weren't quite fresh—that is, not as fresh as the other flowers—the gentleman could have those at his price. And the gentleman took them all done up In a box with a lot of asparagus. His latch key was out half way up the steps and he sailed in as if noth- ing had happened—that was the best tactics, he told himself—and, with the sinile of conscious virtue, he presented the glorified package without a word. But wife had known him for five years and she opened the offering with res- ervations. And when she thanked him he suddenly began to wonder if she had perhaps seen his pink carnations on her way to market every day for a week. But then it was too late. How do we get that way? This is che mental attitude that puts a new coat of white paint on a house that needs to have its foundations re- newed. (®, 1924, by the Eastment Syndicate.) The Patient Burro Generations of burros have been so resoundingly beaten that a racial re- venge seems to have settled into an irritating indifference to punishment. | The instrument of castigation is never Jess than a club one inch in diameter. The burro has learned to flex Its joints when the blow descends so as to break its force. young fellow it seemed to be, was once observed to mistime its flex and in consequence received so full a benefit of the blow that if indubi- tably knocked all future attempts at anticipation from its anatomy. Rumors are growing louder that the burro will be displaced by the motor car. In that case it will work its own destruction ; it will transport the end- less variety of material to build the road that will lead to its doom. Humanity is lagging behind the burro in the race for existence, Whether it finds nourishment in mere philosophical contemplation is an open question. Who has ever seen a burro being fed? A nose-bag would surely stifle it. As for eating, a burro was once observed hastily snatching a banana peel as it loped along with its load and receiving a hollow-sounding whack from the driver by way of gratitude for pick- ing up a living.—Lima (Peru) West Coast Leader. es For Biological Survey The finest equipment for biologlea) research in the world has been made possible by a gift of $1,400,000 to the Woods Hole (Mass.) Marine Biological laboratory. A combined laboratory and library building to cost about $600,000, will be constructed at once, which, with the present facilities, will form an ideal plant for the institutions Interested in this work. The gift was a joint contribution from the Rocke- feller foundation, from John D. Rocke- feller, Jr:;, from the Friendship fund endowed by Charles R. Crane, and from the Carnegie corporation. The laboratory was planned on a national co-operative basis, as it is open to all American institutions. During 1923, 70 universities and research organiza- tions contributed to its support. Snake’s Dinner As one fleld mouse may kill ten trees a year, and & single snake will eat 150 mice in a season, is not one snake worth 1,500 trees? The Reptile Study Society of America held its an- nual dinner in New York, sounding once more the Keymote of its policy and definite aim, “Protect the snakes,” says Nature Magazine, We have all been taught to respect the wise old owl a8 the swora enemy: of rats mice, and ‘other. rodents’ which do such tre- mendous dama to our trees ‘and crops. The ke ip equally with the owl the friend of mankind. Radio in Iceland On a tiny veleanic island known as Jan Mayers Land, north of Iceland, the Norwegian government has estab- lished a radio weather station. This farthest north station is in the track of the fierce arctic storms sweeping toward the coast of Norway and is of untold value im broadcasting warn- ings of the gales coming out of the north. The eperator is an American citizen, Akbard Bkerold, anc he, with bis assistants, are the first perman- ent inhabitants of the island. But he And today | One of them, a ness in marriage? The answer is to be found in an ob- servation not of very new marriages but of those which have known years of storms, of disappointments, of dis- ‘illusions. In happy marriages which ‘might so easily have been unhappy, is it not the power of being companion- able which has kept husband and wife together? Marriages have often come to a tragic end because the man and the woman have not learned to be friends. In a marriage where the joys of companionship have been incom- pletely realized, a disappointment In marriage as such may lead to per- manent estrangement. But where there is real friendship, a happy com- panionship, a joy in doing things to- gether, the desire to continue a great comradeship may nrove stronger than the wish to end a disappointing mar- riage. Modern women expect much more from. life than their mothers expected. I am always surprised and a little en- vious when, reading the novels of the latter Victorian days, I find how con- tented women were with a little hap- Dinesg They made a little joy go a ong’ way, The women of today might take a lesson from those unconscious hero- i ines. If marriage as a romantic rela- tionship has proved a disappointment, there is inspiration and refuge in the knowledge that a friendship between | husband and wife may be the most beautiful relationship in the world, ' becoming a more lasting bond than the marriage tle itself.—Jane Tav- erner in the Continental Edition of the London Mail. Pigeon Breeding Popular Centuries old, pigeon breeding today 8 said to be the hobby of a million Americans. Beginring with the hum- ble, wild blue rock dove in the days of the Egyptian and Roman empires, inbreeding and crossbreeding have continued until now there are some 300 varieties of fancy pigeons recognized. Particularly responsive to experiments, these birds are being improved and trained as carefully as thoroughbred race horses. It is claimed that a prize winner is more often the result of years of work on the part of some far-seeing fancier than an accidental discovery. So important is heredity accounted that a blue ribbon bird will bring hundreds of dollars or even a thousand or more. Throughout the centuries, the pigeon has proved to be a steadily increasing factor in the military operations of nations. The development and training of the reli- able, sturdy homing pigeon with its keen eyes and powerful wings is now a part of the programs of many coun tries, for use when other means of communication fail. Built on racing lines, the homer is trained by slow stages to fly unswervingly to a given point from great distances.—Pepular Mechanics Magazine. Carried to the Sea Among the multifarious duties of United States geologieal survey is In- vestigation of the quality of the water in rivers and streams throughout the country. The Colorado river dis- charges into the Gulf of California every year 388,000,000 tons of mud and silt as suspended matter. In ad- dition, the dissolved substances In the water include 4,500,000 tons of glauber's salt, 4,000,000 tons of lime, more than 2,000,000 tons of gypsum and more than 4,500,000 tons of ep- ‘som salt. The discharge of salt from the Colorado is equal to 20 “tons an- nually for each square mile drained *« the river, but, in proportion to me size of the area drained, this amount is far less than that com- tained in 1,680 tons for each square ‘mile of area drained. - How a Tree Grows A popular belief seems to be that | i a scar on a free trunk “grows up- ward with the tree.” "Such, of course, 18 not the case, says: Nature Maga- sine. A blaze mark struck shoulder high by a trapper a hundred years ago will still be shoulder high today. A tree expands In girth with the gea- fons, but greater height is attained only by new growth at the top. Painting en Spider Web What is regarded as one of the most ‘singular works of art in existence 1s HAPPY MARRIAGE TIE Lyon & Co. Lyon & Co. Womens and Misses Coate A big collection of exclusive styles and the newest models. Coats fur-trim- med in light fur, brown and black. Cloth Coats with- out fur, in braided effects; also button-trimmed—in the new cloths and new colors. Prices Temptingly Low We have Coats to fit the junior (regular size) and have made special effort this season to fit the out-size. Silk and Wool Dresses You will be surprised to see the large assortment of Silk Dresses in all ‘the new colors—Green, Brown, Tan, Hollywood, Black, Taupe. If you want a plain self-trimmed Dress we can show these. Or if you want the Bulgarian touches, beaded, or Roman colors, we have these—$14.98 up. Wool Dresses—A large line, all kinds, all colors; also a full assortment in silks and wool (extra sizes) at prices that can’t be matched. Art and Embroidery We can Give you Anything in the Stamped Linens Begin your Xmas Gifts Now Lyon & Co. « Lyon & Co. Come to the “Watchman” office for High Class Job work. Boys School Shoes Guaranteed to Wear or a New Pair Given Only $3.00 Store Open Thursday Afternoon Yeager’s Shoe Store THE SHOE STORE FOR THE POOR MAN now in the possession of a Berlin deal- |g er. Tt ix a painting 6 by 4 inches, ex- ecuted on a spider web and preserved |i by being clamped between two plates of glass. 50 that ene can examine it on hoth sides. The scene depicted is that af = happy family sitting together. Bush Arcade Building 58-27 BELLEFONTE, PA.